Arylamidase of Neisseria catarrhalis
- PMID: 5685999
- PMCID: PMC252440
- DOI: 10.1128/jb.96.4.1240-1248.1968
Arylamidase of Neisseria catarrhalis
Abstract
Neisseria catarrhalis produces arylamidase intracellularly and is one of the gram-negative bacteria producing exceptionally large amounts of this enzyme. In general, gram-positive bacteria do not produce this enzyme. Arylamidase from N. catarrhalis was purified by salt fractionation, chromatography, and density gradient ultracentrifugation. Its sedimentation coefficient was 6.6; l-alanine-beta-naphthylamide (betaNA) was the most rapidly hydrolyzed amino acid-betaNA. The enzyme had pK(e) values of 6.1 and 8.7 and pK(es) values of 7.1 and 7.9; only those amino acid-betaNA compounds of the l configuration were susceptible to hydrolysis. Arylamidase catalyzed stepwise hydrolysis of dipeptide-betaNA, beginning with the N-terminal residue. Substrates having amino acid residues with larger R groups, such as leucine, interacted much more effectively with enzyme. The significance of the predominate occurrence of arylamidase activity in gram-negative bacteria and the role of this enzyme in the physiology of these organisms remain unclear. It has been established, however, that arylamidase is distinct from leucine aminopeptidase.
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